Ahem...while I am responsible for my rather glib comment being misinterpreted I should probably clarify. I was not laying the blame for Greece's woes at the door of the IMF but rather attempting to point out that its policies and the terms of its intervention have taken a sick patient and made it worse.
I think it is becoming increasingly clear that killing economic growth through externally-imposed austerity is serving nobody's interests, including Greece's creditors who seem to have lost sight of the principal investment while focusing too much on keeping interest payments current. Do they want to increase their chances of getting their money back?
Interesting to compare the current situation with the IMF's failed intervention in Argentina. A quick google search will find it for you but here is a snappy one-pager where some of the parallels are drawn out.
Furunculus, I think you and I largely agree on the causes of this situation. As I said before, it's a failure of political leadership across Europe and over many years that has brought us to this point. You are more apt to frame it in terms of a lack of representation, but I think it's just a different aspect of the same issue.
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